Through on-the-ground interviews and NYC open data research, the team investigated barriers to health access that distance these majority-immigrant neighborhoods from basic preventive services. These barriers include language, financial hardship, time constraints due to overwork, cultural norms, and confusing health care institutions.

To work around these barriers, the team set up blood pressure checkpoints in hair salons, plazas, and supermarkets. The checkpoints were staffed by medical students fluent in the most common local languages.

"This project tests how well you can communicate complex problems like the one we’re trying to solve in Elmhurst-Corona," said Dana Cohen. "We had to really distill it down and make it simple so that we could understand it ourselves and communicate it to our various audiences."

Cohen, Ulerio, and Wen competed against five other teams of MPA students before a panel of faculty judges charged with awarding a hypothetical $500,000 city grant.

The project was part of the MPA program's new, community-based approach to final team projects. Each group focused on proposing innovative solutions to a public health issue rather than working with one organization.